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Chicago examiner c * i wpl xv no 44 a m sunday Chicago may 2 1915 sunday price five cents unknown rcommittee votes to present â– measure to utilities committee fin legislature next tuesday hpointment of city commission by mayor with approval of council included in bill publicans favor plan while democrats vote against it traction interests in opposition b home role bill will be prenented it taeoday to the ntilltlps commlt â– of the house at sprlnjrfield the kortnnt feature of the bill 111 he hrovlnlon for the appointment of htr rommlulon by the mayor with i approval of the connell h tni practically aiarreed j-enter i to knock out the nectlon kivinsr hrhlcajro commission power to call h^^the nintr eonimlmdon for data and ncrvloen of experts h Chicago home rule for public util hities took its first struggling step of hthe six necessary to becoming a re hality yesterday the subcommittee of the house utilities committee dc hjelriecl in executive session by a vote htf 4 to 2 to present to the full com butt-f i bill crentincr a Chicago com hilssiou to be appointed by the mayor blth the approval of the city council â– the subcommittee decided to re the bill to the full committee hwithout recomniendation the full bpnimlttee will meet in springfield wo tuesday i the next hurdle for home rule will he found in the committee three hownstate members of the subcom ittee were absent yesterday they ere lee o'n'eil browne of ottawn ibvr m provine of taylorville and ii cooper of fairfield be opposes bill h)ip bill gets through the com â– â€¢ it will get into trouble in the h but chairman mccormick be hj the necessary 77 votes can be house passes it a senate hiittee will get it next then the hie and finally the governor gov â– r dunne has shown no friendli h to the home rule idea his atti h/e was taken while a democratic hninistration held the city hall hw that a republican is aiayor it is h view of many politicians that the ftemor would be more inclined n ever to see clipped the wings of state commission he himself ap hited â– was by a party vote that the de h was reached in the subcom ee yesterday to give the appoint kower to the mayor those favor i the plan were representatives detoung hamlin and tteff all republicans the nega i were burns and mcgloon both to democrats hearing was started â– consideration of the charter fission's bill with steam rail h stricken out at the instance of hiey john c drennan of the ii â– central and assistant corpora james g skinner â– '-â– ' w miller representing the h>n interests argued strongly hi giving utilities control to the h'ounfil he said the traction were not opposed to local but they wanted to see it in lands of a stable bod appointed hang terms and less liable to be h ( eii by frequent political changes â– nd and by popular clamor li:\t bill tuesday subcommittee went into exec session in the afternoon and hkilly sent for skinner porter and tier they were told that the sub h '. ''â€¢â€¢!â– had voted in favor of a hj i-ul i ommtssion appointed by the â– ' j^fc after a discussion of other hjh^h of the bill which brought â– ompromises but few definite it was decided to permit the ' n to draw up two revised ver 5Â§hw ne bill for presentation to hwimittee nÂ»xt tuesday h i^h eei a '^ aroui "' fiat sfc ves power to the * "^^ vll *' jhh^b *Â° raw Â° n t htÂ»;rt service and wn out c.a.a votes to build 3,000,000 home for club willoughby building to be torn down and old structure will be razed wiih 500 members present m per son and 2.200 others represented by proxies making a total of about 95 per cent of the membership of the Chicago athletic association the sentiment was unanimous for the building of a 3,000,000 home for the club when president francis . stuyvesant peabody presented the | architects plans last night this means another splendid building for michigan avenue one feature of the new building ! is to be an annex devoted exclu i sively to the women of the mem i bers families it is the plan of the club to tear down the old wil â– loughby building at the corner of madison and michigan also to wreck the present club building and make the new home a solid structure with 160 feet fronting on michigan avenue and 170 on mad ison street and as tall as the city building ordinances will permit mrs charles g huse sues for decree san francisco may i wine and another woman have disrupted the romance of juanita wells huse one of san francisco's most famous society beauties m the days before the fire and charles g huse former wealthy Chicago clubman and busi ness man declaring she was unable to en dure the humiliation of having the other woman constantly flaunted m her face mrs huse to-day filed suit for divorce laying the blame for the domestic trageda on huse's devotion to the gayety of cafe life and â€” the other woman the couple married here m november 1905 huse to-day declared the trouble due to the fact that his wife did not choose to live at their home m men docino county preferring the city the Chicago city directory of two years ago shows huse was secretary of the commercial life insurance company living at 1528 dearborn avenue lawton sword given to camp by proxy the presentation to camp luzon army of the philippines of the sword of major general lawton killed m action was the feature of a meeting of the organization last night at the hotel sherman the only drawback j was that the orator patrick h o'donnell president of the irish fel lowship club forgot to bring the sword but he made the speech and there were talks by general charles king commander w a moffett of the great lakes naval station and others even a ford balks at maple sirup for oil by international news service new york may 1 â€” yes said the rev william l davidson of brooklyn my ford is running again that car had a strange experience about christmas i received a present of a gallon can of what i supposed was fine lubricating oil i decided to put some m my car the car ran for three blocks and stopped two machinists towed it away i went home to test the oil it looked fine and i tasted it it was maple sirup tony biddle a revivalist ily lnternntit>nnl rem service washington may 1 â€” tony bid die or properly speaking anthony j drexel biddle society boxer and athlete is coming to washington shortly m the role of an advocate of practical religion biddle will make a series of addresses before washing ton sunday school and bible classes barred by guard from own home c h davis negro purchases residence at 4506 forrestville aye white residents object meets man with revolver as he tries to enter house warned to keep away from property ' | legal proceedings to be started i m effort to oust new owner from neighborhood charles h davis a negro employe of the postoffice has purchased a two-story stone residence at 4306 forrestville avenue he is not living m the house nor will he until the courts give him poss-ession the house is now oc cupied by an armed custodian placed there by the white residents of the block which is devoted almost ex clusively to private residences the custodian was placed there by charles m haft an asistant corpor ation counsel and wallace g clark drainage trustee both of whom live in the block and have the support of nearly all their neighbors in cluding herbert e rycroft 4541 for restville avenue president of the bartlett-frazier company james a patten's grain firm david pfaelzer of the firm of louis pfaelzer & co packers 4514 forrestville ai'enue j s hardy vice president of c w mcnear & co bond brokers 4522 forrestville avenue h f veymeyer president of ths Chicago dock com pany 4552 forrestville avenue and others met by armed Â«. i 1u davis got only as far as the door way when he attempted to take pos ) session of his property yesterday confronting him was a man armed with a revolver he warned the ne gro to come no further the negro read a notice which had been pasted on a front window of the house then turned on his heel and departed without comment the no tice was addressed to the armed cus todian and read mr john fleming you are hereby authorized to take posses sion as custodian of the property known as 4 506 forrestville avenue and hold possession thereof against all persons and for that purpose j the keys are delivered into your hands the notice was signed charles m haft personally and for others per sons on said street davis remains away at a late hour last night fleming the custodian remained on guard inside the house while a policeman waited outside to avoid trouble da vis however did not return when word that the negro had pur chased the house was passed around among his prospective white neigh bors there was a hasty meeting called william b denny who occu pied the residence moved out yester day morning a committee headed by haft and clark consulted with denny and obtained the keys to the place from him then they secured the custodian and placed him m charge another meeting was held last night m clark's home to plan legal proceedings to oust the negro from his ownership at this meeting clark haft and pfae,lzer were the speakers scheme to extort money it is nothing but a scheme on the part of davis to extort money from us said haft afterward he ex pects us to buy him out at an ex orbitant price we are going to the real estate agent who negotiated the sale monday morning and see whether the sale to davis will hold water we don't believe it will boys carry explosives from fire northwestern academy cadets rescue 10,000 of 25,000 j rounds for their gatlings west hall at highland park burned and every student incurs some clothing losses captain of baseball team sick m bed at the time escapes m a sweater and old trousers when old west hall of the north western military academy at high land park burned yesterday noon the hundred-odd boys gave ample proof that they are already good sol diers there were stored m that building 25,000 rounds of ammuni tion for the gatling guns â€” not blank cartridges but sure enough war ma terial and those hundred cadets charged into the midst of the flames while cartridges exploded and bullets whistled and carried out 10,000 rounds the rest was destroyed no body was wounded all the boys suffered some loss of belongings and one lance corporal david goode captain of the baseball team who was sick m bed escaped m a sweater an old pair of trousers and a pair of bed slippers in this guise he grinningly went through a drill for a movie camera man who was at hand formerly a girls school the site of the school was original ly occupied by the famous old high land hall a girls school where many of the most prominent women of highland park to-day were educated the principal was dr nathaniel but ler now of the university of Chicago it burned m 1888 and colonel h t davidson transferred his military school there from morgan park and built west hall his son is the pres ent commandant the fire yesterday destroyed west hall but all else was saved including a fleet of eleven 8-cylinder autos m which some of the students will make a trip to the panama-pacific exposi tion next month loss about * 15,000 a comical feature of the fire was a clash between the fire departments of lake forest and highland park when the chief of the lake forest department issued orders to the high land park men he was told to go where there was a bigger fire there was also much interference by the spectators until the cadets formed fire lines and held the crowd back the loss is estimated at 75,000 the property is covered by a blanket insurance policy of 90,000 the cadets will suffer little hard ship through the fire they are now sleeping m tents borrowed from port sheridan and to-morrow they start for their summer camp at lake geneva shipwrecked crew picked up at sea by international newa service san diego cal may 1 â€” eleven members of the crew of the mexican steamer victoria which foundered twenty-five miles southwest of the coronado islands at 11 o'clock last night were picked up m an eighteen foot lifeboat by the pilot boat pilot off the whistling buoy this after noon and brought safely to port the shipwrecked sailors had spent eight een hours m the open boat the vic toria's fifteen passengers were taken off last night by the american-hawaii steamer american maybelle swift heiress weds a.c.p.wincmeld widow of titanic victim once engaged to prince alexis of serbia mrs maybelle swift moore a cousin of louis f swift of Chicago and at one time engaged to prince alexis karageorgevitch of the serbian royal family was married quietly m washington yesterday to axel c p winchfield of new york nephew of constantin brun united states minister to denmark mrs winchfield was the widow of clarence moore a victim of the titanic disaster and is said to be worth several million dollars she is the daughter of e c swift of boston the breaking of the engagement of miss swift and prince kara georgevitch several years ago caused an international sensation socially the two met m paris m 1900 the prince after the pro posed alliance was called off de clared miss swift's father had tried to force him to eat humble pie lieut max as dentist is a poor detective lieutenant max heidelmeier has discovered that he doesn't know as much about dentistry as he does about catching criminals friday he rushed into the office of dr ernest prennig 1217 clybourn avenue you're a fine dentist he shouted that bridge you put m my mouth the other day is made of putty and not teeth it's so soft i can push it up with my finger the dentist extracted from max's mouth a piece of apple he had been eating and which had caught under the bridge women to buy shaft for mrs.falkenstein women of Chicago will purchase the tombstone for the grave of esther falkensteln while the found er of the settlement house was m hospital the women had planned a benefit card party for may 8 m man del's tea room mrs william severin announced yesterday that the fund raised will be devoted to the tomb stone california senate indorses suffrage by international news service sacramento cal may i.â€”wom an suffrage m california has been an unqualified success the politi cians have stamped it with their ap proval the senate went on record to-day as unanimously in favor of it the resolution to this effect by sen ator kahoe of humboldt was adopted without a dissenting voice johnny evers sister tries to die in river by international news service new york may 1 â€” mrs jane denning who says she is a sister to johnny evers famous second base man of the boston braves leaped into the east river at thirty-first street to-day m an attempt to com mit suicide she fought joseph apento who tried to save her but he succeeded isadora duncan dance in shoes impossible by international newn service new york may i lsadora dun can the dancer was sued to-day m the city court for 168 worth of shoes which she is alleged to have ordered and used but did not pay for the shoes were ordered in february 1915 from israel miller and are said to have been used m her perform ances sudden stroke fatal to dr j g princell i dr j g princell a retired minister and founder of the free mission church died last night m the hen j rotin hospital he was stricken with apoplexy at his home 913 gait street early m the afternoon he had been president of ansgoria college knox ville 111 and editor of the Chicago bladet a scandinavian church paper the weather Chicago and vicinity â€” fair to-day and probably to-morrow no 4 much chanjre in temperature modern c to in.i fs^t-rly wind yesterday's temperatures high 4s lowest 41 v liÃŸifcai death dive predicted by crew of sunken f-4 wife of gunner's mate on lost submarine declares husband i said we'll never come up one engine out of commission other m bad repair machinist told her says widow's letter repair work rushed too fast another reason for wreck ex-yeoman defends crew ev:dence came to light m Chicago yest--day that he united states sub marine f-4 was m such bad condi tion the day she dived and stayed down the tragedy was predicted by members of the crew net only did at least three men of the crew agree the night before that an attempted dive the next day would be fatal but two of them had sepa rate and distinct reasons for their common opinion tha actual words used by the sailors who foretold their own fate are quoted m a letter written by the widow of one she is mrs a h lunge who was a bride of six weeks when her husband a gunner's mate on the submarine went to his death yeoman gets letter tie letter was received by george d ferguson formerly chief yoeman of the u s s west virginia which towed the f-4 from san francisco to honolulu fergjson was honor ably discharged from the navy late m february after eight years serv ice and now lives with his wife in north Chicago he was acquainted with all the twenty-two men who died m the f-4 machlnst hill electrician deeth and lunger until his marriage lived at the home of the fergusons in honolulu mrs lunger's sister is the widow of chief gunner's mate pierard an other victim of the f4 she is the mother of small twins the letter from mrs lunger is dated honolulu april 15 with the exception of a few personal refer ences directed to mrs ferguson it reads i am so lonely now the boys are gone it seems so hard if i could only have told arch good-by or gone with him but it was not to be we were together a little over six weeks and were so happy i walked to the gate with arch thursday morning it was the last time i ever saw him he was all i had but i will have the baby it is all i have to live for now my sister has her sorrow too both of our boys are gone we will stay together with our babies she in tends to work 1 will care for our home and babies we will come either to san francisco or oakland to live the government allows us a small pension and six months pay so at first we will manage to live declares work rushed i suppose you have heard nothing but newspaper reports of the f-4 so i will tell you what i know wednes day jim and deeth were up to the house they were talking of the f-4 jim said " if we dive to-morrow we will never come up one engine is all out of commission and only one lung is working m the other engine deeth said that the work was rushed too much at pearl harbor after the ex plosion and that it was not well done arch said m his opinion they had too much main ballast that it would be impossible to blow tanks and come up if they went down they even talked of how to raise the boat with the alert that the only way would be to catch the stern as the alert would only be able to raise one end of the f-4 sorry she let him go oh if 1 only had made arch stay at home why did they go down when they knew these things i cannot understand they are still trying to raise the f-4 the divers were down walking around on her yesterday the super structure is broken the hull seems m perfect condition so far as they were able to tell one side lies ' buried m the sand they have a cable j around each end of her they are putting more around to-day 1873 landstrum called by international news service amsterdam may 1 a ntral news dispatch from vienna states that the landstrum of the lilt 7 class has been ordered to the colors germans seize ten steamers and sink two swedish vessels captured 01 way to england russian sent to bottom by international news service london may 1 â€” extraordinary activity by german naval forces particularly m the baltic sea is evi denced to-day by the seizing of ten swedish vessels the sinking of one russian steamer and the destruc tion of a british trawler with a crew of nine men the capture of the swedish steamers is announced m a dispatch from amsterdam which asserts that the vessels were all bound to eng lish ports they were put m charge of prize crews and taken to swine munde on the baltic the russian steamer svrone has been torpedoed by a german sub marine u-26 off the coast of county kerry southwestern ireland ac cording to a message received here to-day the svrone was bound for archangel russia's northern port from port talbot wales with a cargo of coal a grimsby dispatch aserts that the trawler mercia missing since march 20 with a crew of nine was given up for lost to-day she is be hved to have been torpedoed or blown up by a mine m the north sea the destruction of eight german submarines by british mines and nets m the north sea m the last week is claimed to-day the ger man craft are said to have been de coyed into the channel by the re tirement of the british fleet from the north sea neutrality violation in u.s again charged by international news service new york may 1 â€” gaston bul lock means who says he uncovered proof tfiat submarine parts were be ing built m the fore river shipbuild ing yards at quincy mass and shipped to montreal for the british government said to-night i intend to present new proofs of breaches of neutrality to the state department early next week i have the numbers of the cars which car ried submarine sections to the mc vickar assembling plant m montreal recently a Chicago boilermaker was shot because he attempted to en ter a montreal shipyard his widow i understand received j15.000 to take no action u.s pledged to allies m 1897 says savant by international news service st louis mo may 1 â€” roland g usher professor of history at wash ington university said to-day that he knew of a secret verbal alliance between the united states and the allies his statement followed simi lar charges m new york by fred erick f schrader i did not learn my facts from president eliot said professor usher and i am unwilling to state where 1 got my information we entered into the agreement m 1897 when mckinley was president of the united states typhus invades u s on ships from greece by international news service new york may i the dread typhus fever reached american shores from plague-ridden eastern europe to-day on the greek liner christofors the ship's last port of call was mar seilles from which she cleared on april 10 the victim the third engi neer was placed m the hospital at quarantine he is a greek germans wipe out winnipeg rifles by international slews service winnipeg man may i the lat est list of casualties received to-night shows that the ninetieth winnipeg rfles have been annihilated m france all the officers are either killed wounded or missing and 430 men are m the list of casualties dutch save german airmen in north sea by international news service flushing holland may 1 â€” the dutch steamer american outward bound picked up two german aviat ors floating on the wreck of their airship about five miles west of the nordhlnder lightship the airship sank after the men had been descuei they will be interned rout of allies is claimed by turks landing force driven from lamjj hold on gallipoli ; saved fr annihilation m wild retreath ships says constantino ottoman reports claim attach forces have lost 10,fl men m efforts to seize lfi|pj dardanelles forf h.atmnsÃŸg narrows fort is silenced kan british are advan.r . sh official statement from â– ens london silent m rial hy international xews srriicrl london may i â€” ibbib ports from athens to-nijÂ«hÃŸ assert that fort nagara on i â– dardanelles three miles ahcÃŸ the narrows on the asiatÃŸ side has been silenced by tlfl allied fleets bombardment â– by international ew service london may i while eonfllc^gf ing reports are hplnir received - c^mia garding operations m the ! inrda m.j^b the only details of lii battle â– jm ing from the allies being unt^h an official statement received constantinople via berlin io-nii;m declares the allies have been drn'^kpf back with heavy losses at the ub point still held on the shore of straits and were saved from u'.t^bhl rout only by the protecting fire the ships guns sffi an earlier statement said french and british troops had vh driven from the whole of the cah poll peninsula with the exceptioih a force still holding kaba tepe i night's announcement says fl at kaba tepe the enemy at'a^b ed to extricate himself from of land lie was repulsed and^b to retreat at a point 500 metr^b yards from the coast and flee^b the protection of his ships gunsÃŸ enemy's losses were enormous enemy's attempt to land troops i the bay of saros under the protecf^j of his fleet was completely fr^h&v trated v claim 10,000 lost â– unofficial dispatches say there i^h violent fighting at a point fifte(^k miles up the straits just above tfl narrows 3sk the operations have resulted slaÃŸ heavy losses to the allies says cb stantinople one report stating i^m 10,000 french and british troopwjÃŸ been killed and wounded to-day's official statement addeoh several sailing vessels filled wi^e'i soldiers were hit by turkish shel^h and sunk off sedd-el-bahr '?â– > j jiagara bombarded s reporth from athens state that th allied fleet has violently i'oinbardeds nagara three miles above the nar^b rows on the asiatic side but that ih'b forts there did not reply on the ei^b ropean side the turkish forces tdh concentrated around maidos the lowiÃŸ directly opposite nagara which hl british admiralty yesterday reporte^h on fire sb british troops have pushed inlan^b from the western shore of gallipoli until they have formed a barrie^b which with the indirect fire from thfl ships prevents the turks from pass^k ing from one shore to the other th^e main forces of the turks are betwee^k maidos and gallipoli at the entrunr^ft to the sea of marmora forty miles i^kg the straits raffi the land forces arc . . i.ikishcill six different points on gallÃŸali jb ships are shelling the tun^bi^h and mobile batteries sÃŸÃŸffissla by international ew athens may i forc draw from the north soutfl the main turkish force on sula of gallipoli is being c^b on the dardanelles littorÃŸÃŸÃŸ gallipoli and maidos and/^b ger of being bottled p t imli it is reported frorii v<b the peninsula is kradualljÃŸÃŸ off from the mainland <>Â£â– that it la now lmposslbÃŸÃŸ turks to cross the dardtÃŸj the european to the asla^b cause of the long-range i anglo-fr<uich fleet ixtrag inside facts riggs bank-u s treasury controversy told for the first time m a series of articles beginning m to-morrow's examiner â– j|^r;..ma of real life that will have important a beaj 14^-esiaential campaign j 8 a.m r

Chicago examiner c * i wpl xv no 44 a m sunday Chicago may 2 1915 sunday price five cents unknown rcommittee votes to present â– measure to utilities committee fin legislature next tuesday hpointment of city commission by mayor with approval of council included in bill publicans favor plan while democrats vote against it traction interests in opposition b home role bill will be prenented it taeoday to the ntilltlps commlt â– of the house at sprlnjrfield the kortnnt feature of the bill 111 he hrovlnlon for the appointment of htr rommlulon by the mayor with i approval of the connell h tni practically aiarreed j-enter i to knock out the nectlon kivinsr hrhlcajro commission power to call h^^the nintr eonimlmdon for data and ncrvloen of experts h Chicago home rule for public util hities took its first struggling step of hthe six necessary to becoming a re hality yesterday the subcommittee of the house utilities committee dc hjelriecl in executive session by a vote htf 4 to 2 to present to the full com butt-f i bill crentincr a Chicago com hilssiou to be appointed by the mayor blth the approval of the city council â– the subcommittee decided to re the bill to the full committee hwithout recomniendation the full bpnimlttee will meet in springfield wo tuesday i the next hurdle for home rule will he found in the committee three hownstate members of the subcom ittee were absent yesterday they ere lee o'n'eil browne of ottawn ibvr m provine of taylorville and ii cooper of fairfield be opposes bill h)ip bill gets through the com â– â€¢ it will get into trouble in the h but chairman mccormick be hj the necessary 77 votes can be house passes it a senate hiittee will get it next then the hie and finally the governor gov â– r dunne has shown no friendli h to the home rule idea his atti h/e was taken while a democratic hninistration held the city hall hw that a republican is aiayor it is h view of many politicians that the ftemor would be more inclined n ever to see clipped the wings of state commission he himself ap hited â– was by a party vote that the de h was reached in the subcom ee yesterday to give the appoint kower to the mayor those favor i the plan were representatives detoung hamlin and tteff all republicans the nega i were burns and mcgloon both to democrats hearing was started â– consideration of the charter fission's bill with steam rail h stricken out at the instance of hiey john c drennan of the ii â– central and assistant corpora james g skinner â– '-â– ' w miller representing the h>n interests argued strongly hi giving utilities control to the h'ounfil he said the traction were not opposed to local but they wanted to see it in lands of a stable bod appointed hang terms and less liable to be h ( eii by frequent political changes â– nd and by popular clamor li:\t bill tuesday subcommittee went into exec session in the afternoon and hkilly sent for skinner porter and tier they were told that the sub h '. ''â€¢â€¢!â– had voted in favor of a hj i-ul i ommtssion appointed by the â– ' j^fc after a discussion of other hjh^h of the bill which brought â– ompromises but few definite it was decided to permit the ' n to draw up two revised ver 5Â§hw ne bill for presentation to hwimittee nÂ»xt tuesday h i^h eei a '^ aroui "' fiat sfc ves power to the * "^^ vll *' jhh^b *Â° raw Â° n t htÂ»;rt service and wn out c.a.a votes to build 3,000,000 home for club willoughby building to be torn down and old structure will be razed wiih 500 members present m per son and 2.200 others represented by proxies making a total of about 95 per cent of the membership of the Chicago athletic association the sentiment was unanimous for the building of a 3,000,000 home for the club when president francis . stuyvesant peabody presented the | architects plans last night this means another splendid building for michigan avenue one feature of the new building ! is to be an annex devoted exclu i sively to the women of the mem i bers families it is the plan of the club to tear down the old wil â– loughby building at the corner of madison and michigan also to wreck the present club building and make the new home a solid structure with 160 feet fronting on michigan avenue and 170 on mad ison street and as tall as the city building ordinances will permit mrs charles g huse sues for decree san francisco may i wine and another woman have disrupted the romance of juanita wells huse one of san francisco's most famous society beauties m the days before the fire and charles g huse former wealthy Chicago clubman and busi ness man declaring she was unable to en dure the humiliation of having the other woman constantly flaunted m her face mrs huse to-day filed suit for divorce laying the blame for the domestic trageda on huse's devotion to the gayety of cafe life and â€” the other woman the couple married here m november 1905 huse to-day declared the trouble due to the fact that his wife did not choose to live at their home m men docino county preferring the city the Chicago city directory of two years ago shows huse was secretary of the commercial life insurance company living at 1528 dearborn avenue lawton sword given to camp by proxy the presentation to camp luzon army of the philippines of the sword of major general lawton killed m action was the feature of a meeting of the organization last night at the hotel sherman the only drawback j was that the orator patrick h o'donnell president of the irish fel lowship club forgot to bring the sword but he made the speech and there were talks by general charles king commander w a moffett of the great lakes naval station and others even a ford balks at maple sirup for oil by international news service new york may 1 â€” yes said the rev william l davidson of brooklyn my ford is running again that car had a strange experience about christmas i received a present of a gallon can of what i supposed was fine lubricating oil i decided to put some m my car the car ran for three blocks and stopped two machinists towed it away i went home to test the oil it looked fine and i tasted it it was maple sirup tony biddle a revivalist ily lnternntit>nnl rem service washington may 1 â€” tony bid die or properly speaking anthony j drexel biddle society boxer and athlete is coming to washington shortly m the role of an advocate of practical religion biddle will make a series of addresses before washing ton sunday school and bible classes barred by guard from own home c h davis negro purchases residence at 4506 forrestville aye white residents object meets man with revolver as he tries to enter house warned to keep away from property ' | legal proceedings to be started i m effort to oust new owner from neighborhood charles h davis a negro employe of the postoffice has purchased a two-story stone residence at 4306 forrestville avenue he is not living m the house nor will he until the courts give him poss-ession the house is now oc cupied by an armed custodian placed there by the white residents of the block which is devoted almost ex clusively to private residences the custodian was placed there by charles m haft an asistant corpor ation counsel and wallace g clark drainage trustee both of whom live in the block and have the support of nearly all their neighbors in cluding herbert e rycroft 4541 for restville avenue president of the bartlett-frazier company james a patten's grain firm david pfaelzer of the firm of louis pfaelzer & co packers 4514 forrestville ai'enue j s hardy vice president of c w mcnear & co bond brokers 4522 forrestville avenue h f veymeyer president of ths Chicago dock com pany 4552 forrestville avenue and others met by armed Â«. i 1u davis got only as far as the door way when he attempted to take pos ) session of his property yesterday confronting him was a man armed with a revolver he warned the ne gro to come no further the negro read a notice which had been pasted on a front window of the house then turned on his heel and departed without comment the no tice was addressed to the armed cus todian and read mr john fleming you are hereby authorized to take posses sion as custodian of the property known as 4 506 forrestville avenue and hold possession thereof against all persons and for that purpose j the keys are delivered into your hands the notice was signed charles m haft personally and for others per sons on said street davis remains away at a late hour last night fleming the custodian remained on guard inside the house while a policeman waited outside to avoid trouble da vis however did not return when word that the negro had pur chased the house was passed around among his prospective white neigh bors there was a hasty meeting called william b denny who occu pied the residence moved out yester day morning a committee headed by haft and clark consulted with denny and obtained the keys to the place from him then they secured the custodian and placed him m charge another meeting was held last night m clark's home to plan legal proceedings to oust the negro from his ownership at this meeting clark haft and pfae,lzer were the speakers scheme to extort money it is nothing but a scheme on the part of davis to extort money from us said haft afterward he ex pects us to buy him out at an ex orbitant price we are going to the real estate agent who negotiated the sale monday morning and see whether the sale to davis will hold water we don't believe it will boys carry explosives from fire northwestern academy cadets rescue 10,000 of 25,000 j rounds for their gatlings west hall at highland park burned and every student incurs some clothing losses captain of baseball team sick m bed at the time escapes m a sweater and old trousers when old west hall of the north western military academy at high land park burned yesterday noon the hundred-odd boys gave ample proof that they are already good sol diers there were stored m that building 25,000 rounds of ammuni tion for the gatling guns â€” not blank cartridges but sure enough war ma terial and those hundred cadets charged into the midst of the flames while cartridges exploded and bullets whistled and carried out 10,000 rounds the rest was destroyed no body was wounded all the boys suffered some loss of belongings and one lance corporal david goode captain of the baseball team who was sick m bed escaped m a sweater an old pair of trousers and a pair of bed slippers in this guise he grinningly went through a drill for a movie camera man who was at hand formerly a girls school the site of the school was original ly occupied by the famous old high land hall a girls school where many of the most prominent women of highland park to-day were educated the principal was dr nathaniel but ler now of the university of Chicago it burned m 1888 and colonel h t davidson transferred his military school there from morgan park and built west hall his son is the pres ent commandant the fire yesterday destroyed west hall but all else was saved including a fleet of eleven 8-cylinder autos m which some of the students will make a trip to the panama-pacific exposi tion next month loss about * 15,000 a comical feature of the fire was a clash between the fire departments of lake forest and highland park when the chief of the lake forest department issued orders to the high land park men he was told to go where there was a bigger fire there was also much interference by the spectators until the cadets formed fire lines and held the crowd back the loss is estimated at 75,000 the property is covered by a blanket insurance policy of 90,000 the cadets will suffer little hard ship through the fire they are now sleeping m tents borrowed from port sheridan and to-morrow they start for their summer camp at lake geneva shipwrecked crew picked up at sea by international newa service san diego cal may 1 â€” eleven members of the crew of the mexican steamer victoria which foundered twenty-five miles southwest of the coronado islands at 11 o'clock last night were picked up m an eighteen foot lifeboat by the pilot boat pilot off the whistling buoy this after noon and brought safely to port the shipwrecked sailors had spent eight een hours m the open boat the vic toria's fifteen passengers were taken off last night by the american-hawaii steamer american maybelle swift heiress weds a.c.p.wincmeld widow of titanic victim once engaged to prince alexis of serbia mrs maybelle swift moore a cousin of louis f swift of Chicago and at one time engaged to prince alexis karageorgevitch of the serbian royal family was married quietly m washington yesterday to axel c p winchfield of new york nephew of constantin brun united states minister to denmark mrs winchfield was the widow of clarence moore a victim of the titanic disaster and is said to be worth several million dollars she is the daughter of e c swift of boston the breaking of the engagement of miss swift and prince kara georgevitch several years ago caused an international sensation socially the two met m paris m 1900 the prince after the pro posed alliance was called off de clared miss swift's father had tried to force him to eat humble pie lieut max as dentist is a poor detective lieutenant max heidelmeier has discovered that he doesn't know as much about dentistry as he does about catching criminals friday he rushed into the office of dr ernest prennig 1217 clybourn avenue you're a fine dentist he shouted that bridge you put m my mouth the other day is made of putty and not teeth it's so soft i can push it up with my finger the dentist extracted from max's mouth a piece of apple he had been eating and which had caught under the bridge women to buy shaft for mrs.falkenstein women of Chicago will purchase the tombstone for the grave of esther falkensteln while the found er of the settlement house was m hospital the women had planned a benefit card party for may 8 m man del's tea room mrs william severin announced yesterday that the fund raised will be devoted to the tomb stone california senate indorses suffrage by international news service sacramento cal may i.â€”wom an suffrage m california has been an unqualified success the politi cians have stamped it with their ap proval the senate went on record to-day as unanimously in favor of it the resolution to this effect by sen ator kahoe of humboldt was adopted without a dissenting voice johnny evers sister tries to die in river by international news service new york may 1 â€” mrs jane denning who says she is a sister to johnny evers famous second base man of the boston braves leaped into the east river at thirty-first street to-day m an attempt to com mit suicide she fought joseph apento who tried to save her but he succeeded isadora duncan dance in shoes impossible by international newn service new york may i lsadora dun can the dancer was sued to-day m the city court for 168 worth of shoes which she is alleged to have ordered and used but did not pay for the shoes were ordered in february 1915 from israel miller and are said to have been used m her perform ances sudden stroke fatal to dr j g princell i dr j g princell a retired minister and founder of the free mission church died last night m the hen j rotin hospital he was stricken with apoplexy at his home 913 gait street early m the afternoon he had been president of ansgoria college knox ville 111 and editor of the Chicago bladet a scandinavian church paper the weather Chicago and vicinity â€” fair to-day and probably to-morrow no 4 much chanjre in temperature modern c to in.i fs^t-rly wind yesterday's temperatures high 4s lowest 41 v liÃŸifcai death dive predicted by crew of sunken f-4 wife of gunner's mate on lost submarine declares husband i said we'll never come up one engine out of commission other m bad repair machinist told her says widow's letter repair work rushed too fast another reason for wreck ex-yeoman defends crew ev:dence came to light m Chicago yest--day that he united states sub marine f-4 was m such bad condi tion the day she dived and stayed down the tragedy was predicted by members of the crew net only did at least three men of the crew agree the night before that an attempted dive the next day would be fatal but two of them had sepa rate and distinct reasons for their common opinion tha actual words used by the sailors who foretold their own fate are quoted m a letter written by the widow of one she is mrs a h lunge who was a bride of six weeks when her husband a gunner's mate on the submarine went to his death yeoman gets letter tie letter was received by george d ferguson formerly chief yoeman of the u s s west virginia which towed the f-4 from san francisco to honolulu fergjson was honor ably discharged from the navy late m february after eight years serv ice and now lives with his wife in north Chicago he was acquainted with all the twenty-two men who died m the f-4 machlnst hill electrician deeth and lunger until his marriage lived at the home of the fergusons in honolulu mrs lunger's sister is the widow of chief gunner's mate pierard an other victim of the f4 she is the mother of small twins the letter from mrs lunger is dated honolulu april 15 with the exception of a few personal refer ences directed to mrs ferguson it reads i am so lonely now the boys are gone it seems so hard if i could only have told arch good-by or gone with him but it was not to be we were together a little over six weeks and were so happy i walked to the gate with arch thursday morning it was the last time i ever saw him he was all i had but i will have the baby it is all i have to live for now my sister has her sorrow too both of our boys are gone we will stay together with our babies she in tends to work 1 will care for our home and babies we will come either to san francisco or oakland to live the government allows us a small pension and six months pay so at first we will manage to live declares work rushed i suppose you have heard nothing but newspaper reports of the f-4 so i will tell you what i know wednes day jim and deeth were up to the house they were talking of the f-4 jim said " if we dive to-morrow we will never come up one engine is all out of commission and only one lung is working m the other engine deeth said that the work was rushed too much at pearl harbor after the ex plosion and that it was not well done arch said m his opinion they had too much main ballast that it would be impossible to blow tanks and come up if they went down they even talked of how to raise the boat with the alert that the only way would be to catch the stern as the alert would only be able to raise one end of the f-4 sorry she let him go oh if 1 only had made arch stay at home why did they go down when they knew these things i cannot understand they are still trying to raise the f-4 the divers were down walking around on her yesterday the super structure is broken the hull seems m perfect condition so far as they were able to tell one side lies ' buried m the sand they have a cable j around each end of her they are putting more around to-day 1873 landstrum called by international news service amsterdam may 1 a ntral news dispatch from vienna states that the landstrum of the lilt 7 class has been ordered to the colors germans seize ten steamers and sink two swedish vessels captured 01 way to england russian sent to bottom by international news service london may 1 â€” extraordinary activity by german naval forces particularly m the baltic sea is evi denced to-day by the seizing of ten swedish vessels the sinking of one russian steamer and the destruc tion of a british trawler with a crew of nine men the capture of the swedish steamers is announced m a dispatch from amsterdam which asserts that the vessels were all bound to eng lish ports they were put m charge of prize crews and taken to swine munde on the baltic the russian steamer svrone has been torpedoed by a german sub marine u-26 off the coast of county kerry southwestern ireland ac cording to a message received here to-day the svrone was bound for archangel russia's northern port from port talbot wales with a cargo of coal a grimsby dispatch aserts that the trawler mercia missing since march 20 with a crew of nine was given up for lost to-day she is be hved to have been torpedoed or blown up by a mine m the north sea the destruction of eight german submarines by british mines and nets m the north sea m the last week is claimed to-day the ger man craft are said to have been de coyed into the channel by the re tirement of the british fleet from the north sea neutrality violation in u.s again charged by international news service new york may 1 â€” gaston bul lock means who says he uncovered proof tfiat submarine parts were be ing built m the fore river shipbuild ing yards at quincy mass and shipped to montreal for the british government said to-night i intend to present new proofs of breaches of neutrality to the state department early next week i have the numbers of the cars which car ried submarine sections to the mc vickar assembling plant m montreal recently a Chicago boilermaker was shot because he attempted to en ter a montreal shipyard his widow i understand received j15.000 to take no action u.s pledged to allies m 1897 says savant by international news service st louis mo may 1 â€” roland g usher professor of history at wash ington university said to-day that he knew of a secret verbal alliance between the united states and the allies his statement followed simi lar charges m new york by fred erick f schrader i did not learn my facts from president eliot said professor usher and i am unwilling to state where 1 got my information we entered into the agreement m 1897 when mckinley was president of the united states typhus invades u s on ships from greece by international news service new york may i the dread typhus fever reached american shores from plague-ridden eastern europe to-day on the greek liner christofors the ship's last port of call was mar seilles from which she cleared on april 10 the victim the third engi neer was placed m the hospital at quarantine he is a greek germans wipe out winnipeg rifles by international slews service winnipeg man may i the lat est list of casualties received to-night shows that the ninetieth winnipeg rfles have been annihilated m france all the officers are either killed wounded or missing and 430 men are m the list of casualties dutch save german airmen in north sea by international news service flushing holland may 1 â€” the dutch steamer american outward bound picked up two german aviat ors floating on the wreck of their airship about five miles west of the nordhlnder lightship the airship sank after the men had been descuei they will be interned rout of allies is claimed by turks landing force driven from lamjj hold on gallipoli ; saved fr annihilation m wild retreath ships says constantino ottoman reports claim attach forces have lost 10,fl men m efforts to seize lfi|pj dardanelles forf h.atmnsÃŸg narrows fort is silenced kan british are advan.r . sh official statement from â– ens london silent m rial hy international xews srriicrl london may i â€” ibbib ports from athens to-nijÂ«hÃŸ assert that fort nagara on i â– dardanelles three miles ahcÃŸ the narrows on the asiatÃŸ side has been silenced by tlfl allied fleets bombardment â– by international ew service london may i while eonfllc^gf ing reports are hplnir received - c^mia garding operations m the ! inrda m.j^b the only details of lii battle â– jm ing from the allies being unt^h an official statement received constantinople via berlin io-nii;m declares the allies have been drn'^kpf back with heavy losses at the ub point still held on the shore of straits and were saved from u'.t^bhl rout only by the protecting fire the ships guns sffi an earlier statement said french and british troops had vh driven from the whole of the cah poll peninsula with the exceptioih a force still holding kaba tepe i night's announcement says fl at kaba tepe the enemy at'a^b ed to extricate himself from of land lie was repulsed and^b to retreat at a point 500 metr^b yards from the coast and flee^b the protection of his ships gunsÃŸ enemy's losses were enormous enemy's attempt to land troops i the bay of saros under the protecf^j of his fleet was completely fr^h&v trated v claim 10,000 lost â– unofficial dispatches say there i^h violent fighting at a point fifte(^k miles up the straits just above tfl narrows 3sk the operations have resulted slaÃŸ heavy losses to the allies says cb stantinople one report stating i^m 10,000 french and british troopwjÃŸ been killed and wounded to-day's official statement addeoh several sailing vessels filled wi^e'i soldiers were hit by turkish shel^h and sunk off sedd-el-bahr '?â– > j jiagara bombarded s reporth from athens state that th allied fleet has violently i'oinbardeds nagara three miles above the nar^b rows on the asiatic side but that ih'b forts there did not reply on the ei^b ropean side the turkish forces tdh concentrated around maidos the lowiÃŸ directly opposite nagara which hl british admiralty yesterday reporte^h on fire sb british troops have pushed inlan^b from the western shore of gallipoli until they have formed a barrie^b which with the indirect fire from thfl ships prevents the turks from pass^k ing from one shore to the other th^e main forces of the turks are betwee^k maidos and gallipoli at the entrunr^ft to the sea of marmora forty miles i^kg the straits raffi the land forces arc . . i.ikishcill six different points on gallÃŸali jb ships are shelling the tun^bi^h and mobile batteries sÃŸÃŸffissla by international ew athens may i forc draw from the north soutfl the main turkish force on sula of gallipoli is being c^b on the dardanelles littorÃŸÃŸÃŸ gallipoli and maidos and/^b ger of being bottled p t imli it is reported frorii vÂ£â– that it la now lmposslbÃŸÃŸ turks to cross the dardtÃŸj the european to the asla^b cause of the long-range i anglo-fr